Abstract

Traditional ultrasound imaging techniques are limited in spatial resolution to visualize angiogenic vasa vasorum that is considered as an important marker for atherosclerotic plaque progression and vulnerability. The recently introduced super-resolution imaging technique based on microbubble center localization has shown potential to achieve unprecedented high spatial resolution beyond the acoustic diffraction limit. However, a major drawback of the current super-resolution imaging approach is low temporal resolution because it requires a large number of imaging frames. In this study, a new imaging sequence and signal processing approach for super-resolution ultrasound imaging are presented to improve temporal resolution by employing deconvolution and spatio-temporal-interframe-correlation based data acquisition. In vivo feasibility of the developed technology is demonstrated and evaluated in imaging vasa vasorum in the rabbit atherosclerosis model. The proposed method not only identifies a tiny vessel with a diameter of 41 μm, 5 times higher spatial resolution than the acoustic diffraction limit at 7.7 MHz, but also significantly improves temporal resolution that allows for imaging vessels over cardiac motion.

Highlights

  • Acute coronary syndromes (ACS), a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the US and Europe, is generally caused by the plaque rupture or erosion[1,2,3,4]

  • The proposed super-resolution ultrasound imaging method implemented in Verasonics system shown in Fig. 1(d) delineates detail of microvasculature that is shown blurred in other imaging methods due to low spatial resolution that is mainly limited by diffraction limit of the operating frequency

  • It has been shown that super-resolution ultrasound imaging technique has strong potential to extend the application of ultrasound imaging with unprecedented high spatial resolution[24,25,32,33]

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Summary

Introduction

Acute coronary syndromes (ACS), a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the US and Europe, is generally caused by the plaque rupture or erosion[1,2,3,4]. Multi-frequency IVUS (or super-harmonic IVUS) has been widely studied to maintain the advantage of both deep imaging depth (>2.5 mm) and improved spatial resolution (

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